Publication Detail
The publication detail shows the title, authors (with indicators showing other profiled authors), information on the publishing organization, abstract and a link to the article in PubMed. This abstract is what is used to create the fingerprint of the publication. If any grants are referenced by the publication, they will be listed here as well.
Novel CSF biomarkers for frontotemporal lobar degenerations.
W T Hu; A Chen-Plotkin; M Grossman; S E Arnold; C M Clark; L M Shaw; L McCluskey; L Elman; H I Hurtig; A Siderowf; et al. (Profiled Authors: Trojanowski, John Q; Grossman, Murray)
Department of Neurology, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia 19104-4283, USA. trojanow@mail.med.upenn.edu
Neurology 2010;75(23):2079-86.
OBJECTIVE: To identify antemortem CSF diagnostic biomarkers that can potentially distinguish between the 2 main causes of frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD), i.e., FTLD with TDP-43 pathology (FTLD-TDP) and FTLD with tau pathology (FTLD-tau). METHODS: CSF samples were collected antemortem from 23 patients with FTLD with known pathology to form a autopsy cohort as part of a comparative biomarker study that additionally included 33 living cognitively normal subjects and 66 patients with autopsy-confirmed Alzheimer disease (AD). CSF samples were also collected from 80 living patients clinically diagnosed with frontotemporal dementia (FTD). Levels of 151 novel analytes were measured via a targeted multiplex panel enriched in neuropeptides, cytokines, and growth factors, along with levels of CSF biomarkers for AD. RESULTS: CSF levels of multiple analytes differed between FTLD-TDP and FTLD-tau, including Fas, neuropeptides (agouti-related peptide and adrenocorticotropic hormone), and chemokines (IL-23, IL-17). Classification by random forest analysis achieved high sensitivity for FTLD-TDP (86%) with modest specificity (78%) in the autopsy cohort. When the classification algorithm was applied to a living FTD cohort, semantic dementia was the phenotype with the highest predicted proportion of FTLD-TDP. When living patients with behavioral variant FTD were examined in detail, those predicted to have FTLD-TDP demonstrated neuropsychological differences vs those predicted to have FTLD-tau in a pattern consistent with previously reported trends in autopsy-confirmed cases. CONCLUSIONS: Clinical cases with FTLD-TDP and FTLD-tau pathology can be potentially identified antemortem by assaying levels of specific analytes that are well-known and readily measurable in CSF.
8 Originating Grant
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1.
TROJANOWSKI, JOHN Q.
NIA Core Center to Build Neurodegenerative Disease Research Faculty At Penn
30 September 2009 - 31 August 2011
NATIONAL INSTITUTE ON AGING
Total Funding: $ 804,917
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2.
TROJANOWSKI, JOHN Q.
Parkinson's Disease and Dementia
15 June 2007 - 30 June 2017
NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF NEUROLOGICAL DISORDERS AND STROKE
Total Funding: $ 11,949,028
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3.
GROSSMAN, MURRAY
Neural Basis of Generalized Quantifiers
1 May 2004 - 31 January 2015
NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF NEUROLOGICAL DISORDERS AND STROKE
Total Funding: $ 5,533,675
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4.
MILLER, BRUCE L
Frontotemporal Dementia: Genes, Images, and Emotions
1 July 2001 - 31 August 2017
NATIONAL INSTITUTE ON AGING
Total Funding: $ 16,462,680
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5.
LEE, VIRGINIA M
Frontotemporal Dementias: Genotypes and Phenotypes
15 March 2000 - 29 February 2016
NATIONAL INSTITUTE ON AGING
Total Funding: $ 19,741,888
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6.
GROSSMAN, MURRAY
Conceptual Processing in Alzheimer's Disease
15 December 1997 - 31 July 2011
NATIONAL INSTITUTE ON AGING
Total Funding: $ 4,948,071
-
7.
TROJANOWSKI, JOHN Q.
Alzheimer's Disease Core Center
15 July 1997 - 30 June 2016
NATIONAL INSTITUTE ON AGING
Total Funding: $ 25,158,594
-
8.
Trojanowski, John Q
Molecular substrates of aging and neuron death
15 May 1997 - 30 April 2010
NATIONAL INSTITUTE ON AGING
Total Funding: $ 24,601,856
Scientific Context
This section shows information related to the publication - computed using the fingerprint of the publication - including related publications, related experts and related grants with fingerprints representing significant amounts of overlap between their fingerprint and this publication. The red dots indicate whether those experts or terms appear within the publication, thereby showing potential and actual connections.
Related Grants
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1.
LEE, VIRGINIA M
Frontotemporal Dementias: Genotypes and Phenotypes
15 March 2000 - 29 February 2016
NATIONAL INSTITUTE ON AGING
Total Funding: $ 19,741,888
-
2.
IQBAL, KHALID
Subgroups of Alzheimer Disease
15 May 2007 - 30 April 2012
NATIONAL INSTITUTE ON AGING
Total Funding: $ 1,630,946
-
3.
IQBAL, KHALID
2 September 2011 - 30 June 2014
FOGARTY INTERNATIONAL CENTER
Total Funding: $ 70,352
Related Publications
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1.
2005E D Roberson; J H Hesse; K D Rose; H Slama; J K Johnson; K Yaffe; M S Forman; C A Miller; J Q Trojanowski; J H Kramer; et al.
Frontotemporal dementia progresses to death faster than Alzheimer disease.
Neurology 2005;65(5):719-25. -
2.
2011Dietmar Rudolf Thal; Kelly Del Tredici; Albert C Ludolph; Jeroen J M Hoozemans; Annemieke J Rozemuller; Heiko Braak; Uwe Knippschild
Acta neuropathologica 2011;122(5):577-89. -
3.
2008S X Xie; M S Forman; J Farmer; P Moore; Y Wang; X Wang; C M Clark; H B Coslett; A Chatterjee; S E Arnold; et al.
Factors associated with survival probability in autopsy-proven frontotemporal lobar degeneration.
Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry 2008;79(2):126-9.
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